19Th August 2018 a Few Minutes with the Dictators' Andy Shernoff
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19th August 2018A few minutes with the Dictators' Andy Shernoff [https://3.bp.blogspot.com/- ktsfimQWqvQ/W3oRTeLFQ4I/AAAAAAAABKU/2VDa1FeSHRg_z3qutb5Gw-AIZpfVW- 61gCEwYBhgL/s1600/AS1.jpeg] Photo by Hanna Toresson Andy Shernoff isn’t often lumped in with the Beatles, or the Rolling Stones, or even the Sex Pistols. But with a legacy like his, he doesn’t have to be. Chances are, if you were ever interested enough to check out Garagerocktopia in the first place, we likely need not explain who he is or his place in Rock and Roll. But just in case you need a little clarification, he started a band in New York back in the early ‘70s called the Dictators. That band may never have sold as many albums as they or their record company might have liked, but the sound they cranked out has yet to stop resonating. Shernoff was the singer, bass player and perhaps most importantly, the songwriter for the Dictators. At the time, the phrase “punk rock” had not yet been growled. The music that would earn that name, though, was being birthed, and few bands were more responsible for what eventually popped out than were the Dictators “It’s not like we’re part of the public discourse or anything, but we did play a transitional role in the history of rock,” said Shernoff, who talked to Garagerocktopia by telephone from his upstate New York home and by e-mail. “The first Dictators album was released in 1975 a year before the Ramones and two years before the Sex Pistols. Joey Ramone was wearing glitter when he used to see us wearing leather jackets at The Coventry in Queens.” Other members of the band included lead guitarist Ross “the Boss” Friedman; rhythm guitarist Scott Kempner; drummer Stu Boy King and singer Richard Blum, better known as Handsome Dick Manitoba. The Dictators’ history more requires a book than an article, so we’ll just give you a quick recap. Many contend the Dictators, when they formed in 1973, were the first real-deal punk band. We’ll leave that to the rock historians and music geeks to hash that one out. There’s no dispute, though, that with their aggressive guitars and beats, wisenheimer lyrics, and many a night spent plugging away at CBGB’s, the Dictators would blaze the path for punk rock on both sides of the Atlantic. Today many refer to bands like the Dictators as “proto-punk.” As part of a band that at the time was far from being very well-known, at least in the mainstream, Shernoff says he never expected his music to be so relevant this many years on. To hear Shernoff tell it, by all rights Rock and Roll should never have become his career at all. “I was faking my way through college when I dropped out to start the Dictators,” recounted Shernoff. “My parents were worried because rock was definitely not a career path at the time. You need to understand that in the early 70’s there were no rock musicians older than 30. It was still a baby business with an uncharted future.” “All I know is that I was directionless and saw the light at the end of the tunnel of my life when we started the band.” Much like the MC5, or the Stooges or the New York Dolls, all hard-rockin’ bands a sound too tough to pigeonhole, the Dictators never threatened to change the character of the Billboard album charts. The conventional wisdom about all these bands is that they didn’t sell many records, but everyone who bought one ended up starting a band themselves. [https://1.bp.blogspot.com/- R_vgUNvpquE/W3oRT_De68I/AAAAAAAABKo/ebZnlwQQfT0pBuiITyubYit79xLDTbUBACEwY BhgL/s1600/AS4.jpg] “Those bands came a little before us,” said Shernoff, “but they influenced me and inspired me to pick up a guitar and start a band. To be considered in that company, I’m honored.” Through the ‘70s, Dictators would release more albums, generally loved by critics and musicians, and develop their own following. In the ’80s and early ‘90s, most of the Dictators lineup would record as Manitoba’s Wild Kingdom, playing songs written by Shernoff. Over time, though, members drifted different ways. For a short time Shernoff was a member of the Fleshtones and he also wrote songs for the Ramones, amongst others, has done more cool stuff than we could possibly list here completely. Manitoba owned a bar and has guested with many bands. Other Dictators gravitated to bands as divergent as Manowar and the Del-Lords. The Dictator’s last studio album was 2001’s D.F.F.D. That album by many accounts was the band’s most polished and best crafted, helping Shernoff and company introduce themselves to yet another generation. Later in the decade, the band would headline some of the final nights at CBGBs before the legendary club closed its doors in 2006. By the end of the last decade, though, the Dictators were no more. And, as sadly often happens in rock and roll, a lot of legal squabbling ensued over rights to the Dictators’ music and name. Members have also found themselves in court over other matters as well. Perhaps we’re abdicating our journalistic duties here, but there’s plenty of information elsewhere should you wish to get into the minutiae. The one good thing that has emerged from all of this is that Shernoff now has the rights to some of the very music he created. “We just got back rights to a few Dictators albums,” said Shernoff, “so any time you listen on a music platform like Spotify, you’re supporting the band.” More than forty years after the fact, though, the Dictators’ music and so much of what Shernoff has written still echoes through rock and roll. The energy and sheer fun of the music seems as vibrant today as it did in the ‘70s. Here at Garagerocktopia we do our best to get the word out about music that sounds like the people who make it love it more than anybody else, and few can argue the Shernoff’s music, with the Dictators and beyond, still rocks like crazy. “We were influenced by what came before us and influenced what came after us,” said Shernoff. “I’d also like to think that the quality of the music played a role.” But Shernoff is far from yesterday’s news. He still writes and performs, and often has newer artists asking him to write songs or participate on their albums. It would take a lot of time to calculate just how many artists and bands have either straight- up covered Shernoff’s songs, or at the very least have emulated aspects of his music. Shernoff says it doesn’t take him long to find someone new who’s singing one of his songs. “It’s truly flattering when people cover your songs.” Shernoff admitted. “I particularly like the amateur stuff like the bands doing ‘Stay With Me’ on YouTube. My favorite is three little girls singing along to ‘Who Will Save Rock and Roll?”at a backyard party.” Shernoff is still a sought after collaborators. Artists too young to remember when the Dictators came up have come to the venerable musician for both his voice and his songs. “I occasionally do co-writes and it’s usually friends needing a helping hand or a different perspective on something,” said Shernoff. “Last year, the Dahlmanns from Norway asked me write a duet for me to sing with their singer, Line.” “And recently, a producer for a major country artist approached me to contribute songs. I was told that they will be used but we’ll see if makes the cut when they actually record the album … let me tell you the artist is the last person you’d ever expect to do one of my songs.” [https://4.bp.blogspot.com/- qGHiKUUmirM/W3oRTQHY1lI/AAAAAAAABKk/ixT65kLrcD48Q1YZbG3BWpvdY7Smcq2WgC EwYBhgL/s1600/AS2.jpg] Another surprising seeker of help recently was Michael Moorcock. The British author has dabbled in rock and roll previously, most notably with Hawkwind and Blue Oyster Cult. He asked Shernoff to chip in on his latest project, Spirits Burning. “My buddy, Albert Bouchard from the Blue Oyster Cult, was producing a record with Michael Moorcock, the science fiction writer,” said Shernoff, “and he asked me to sing a song. I chose an edgy tune called ‘Dark Dominion.’ It was a real stretch, completely different from any vocal I’ve ever done before, but good fun!” Shernoff can boast of something so many other artists and musicians would love to be able to say. “Most of all,” said Shernoff, “I am proud that two members of the rock and roll Hall of Fame – Dion DiMucci and the Ramones – have recorded my songs.” Legions of artists have come and gone in the years since Dictators’ music started blowing out speakers. And many amongst that legion have long departed rock and roll. Yet Shernoff remains a working musician. He doesn’t claim any particular genius, instead pointing to his various skills that have kept him working. “I was never successful on any rock star level,” said Shernoff. “I knew I wasn’t the greatest guitar player or musician so I consciously tried to diversify my skills. I’ve worked as a musician, producer and songwriter. If gigs slowed down I would pursue a production job and I was always writing. I held onto my publishing and that’s a big win when music I wrote 40 years ago gets placed on TV or in movies.